O c t o b e r 2 The Future of Jobs



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WEF Future of Jobs 2020

Social Resilience scor
e fr
om the Global Social Mobility Index 2020
-3
0
-6
-9
-15
-12
30
20
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Employment growth (2019-2020 % change based on COVID-19 “double-hit” forecasts)
United States
Turkey
Mexico
Korea, Rep.
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Colombia
Ireland
Portugal
Spain
Slovak Republic
Greece
Israel
Hungary
United Kingdom
Netherlands
Denmark
Finland
Belgium
Austria
Germany
Japan
Slovenia
Norway
Sweden
France
Canada
Poland
Estonia
Iceland
New Zealand
Australia
Czech Republic
Switzerland
The political will to expand social protection has 
often been deadlocked, driven by concerns about 
the long-term impact on labour market participation, 
the efficiency of current tools and the capacity of 
government to deliver these public services with the 
adequate efficiency at scale. Given the large-scale 
disruption to workers from both the pandemic-driven 
recession and the accelerated pace of technology 
adoption, the question cannot be ‘if’ but should be 
‘how’ to expand some of these essential protections.
Research shows that wages have, for some time, 
been misaligned from productivity and that wage 
level can be as much determined by the structure 
of local labour markets or disadvantaged by race 
or gender as they are by workers receiving a 
reasonable return on their skills and productivity.
46 
When it comes to preserving worker’s ability to 
save, governments can cap the erosion of wages, 
ensuring that all workers are able to gain a living 
wage. The economic strain on families subsisting 
on low wages is not conducive to maximizing long-
term human potential and leaves workers vulnerable 
to disruptions. Legislating against bias on the basis 
of gender, race or other characteristics protects the 
connection between employment, wages and the 
skills and capabilities of workers—guaranteeing 
that the talents of all parts of the population are 
used and can drive further growth and prosperity 
in the economy.
Past research has shown that long-term 
displacement from the labour market has a 
persistent, negative effect on workers.
47 
When social 
protection mechanisms are lacking, individuals 
in the midst of a career transition are forced to 
maintain a dual focus—on the one hand trying to 
preserve their quality of life and keep poverty and 
potential destitution at bay, and on the other hand 
attempting to successfully transition to a new role. 


The Future of Jobs
45
For those with historically low wages, it is much 
more likely that basic needs such as health, 
nutrition and access to shelter become paramount 
and overwhelming concerns during such 
periods detract from productive and successful 
transitions to new roles. An individual’s capacity 
to manage this labour market transition can thus 
be undermined, leading to rushed and potentially 
sub-par redeployment and re-employment.
While some social protection policies are remedial 
and short term, not all support can be temporary 
in nature. When it comes to long-term sick leave, 
disability leave or long-term unemployment, social 
protection becomes a fundamental pillar of the 
support for its citizens on an ongoing basis. For 
the purposes of this report we have focused on 
supporting the bounceback of those who are or 
will be unemployed in the short term due to the 
recession and technological change. To expand 
safety nets in the medium to long term, societies 
will need to rebalance current public spending and 
consider expanding fiscal room through effective and 
appropriate taxation.
Governments can proactively shape the 
preconditions for effective labour market transitions 
and worker productivity by strengthening the link 
between skills, wages and employment. This can 
be achieved through policies that fund reskilling 
and upskilling of workers who are mid-way through 
their career and will need further skills to secure 
employment in the future of work, policies which 
ensure that workers are able to create cash reserves 
during periods of employment, and policies which 
legislate against bias in hiring, firing and setting 
wages. Reskilling and upskilling policies that have 
been utilized to date span the conditionality of 
unemployment benefits on taking up new re-
skilling and up-skilling, providing wage subsidies 
to companies which extend reskilling and 
upskilling to workers, providing online learning 
accounts to citizens, and starting to fund online 
learning in addition to university degrees, TVET 
and school tuition. 
A number of countries have in recent years 
developed innovative funding mechanisms to 
finance reskilling of workers. Singapore recently 
complemented its pioneering Skills Future Initiative 
through the deployment of Enhanced Training 
Support Package (ETSP)
48 
to support workers 
and organizations in sustaining investment in 
reskilling and upskilling during COVID-19. The 
package includes a significant increase in funding 
for Absentee Payroll Support and Course Fee 
Support among industries severely hit by the 
pandemic. At the end of 2019, France created an 
individual skills account with an integrated mobile 
application dedicated to vocational training and 
lifelong learning. Under the “moncompteformation.
gouv.fr” (“MySkillsAccount”) scheme, 28 million 
eligible full- and part-time workers will receive €500 
annually directly into their skills account to spend on 
upskilling and continuous learning, with low-skilled 
workers and those with special needs receiving 
up to €800 annually, capped at a total of €5,000 
and €8,000, respectively. The Danish Ministry of 
Employment has introduced a number of measures 
aimed at providing additional opportunities for 
upskilling and job-focused education aimed at 
workers furloughed following as a consequence 
of the economic impact of the pandemic. First, 
both skilled and unskilled workers who pursue a 
vocational education are being provided with 110% 
of their usual unemployment benefits. Additionally, 
the Danish government expanded the scope of its 
current apprenticeship scheme, at the same time 
as prolonging its job rotation scheme, making it 
possible for more unskilled workers to have access 
to upskilling and reskilling opportunities. 
From deploying human resources 
to leveraging human potential 
3.2
As changes to work accelerate, employers are 
bearing witness to a fundamental shift away 
from the linear transitions made by workers 
in previous points of history from school, into 
specialized training, into work and then along a 
progressive career ladder, defined by increasing 
responsibility within an established occupation 
structure. In today’s labour market, workers 
pivot between professions with significantly 
different skill sets, and navigate mid-career job 
transitions accompanied by substantial reskilling 
and upskilling. Those pivots are as important to 
the success of firms as they are to the prosperity 
of workers. Without such pivots skills shortages 
will remain endemic and a scarcity of adequately 
skilled individuals to fill the jobs of tomorrow will 
lead to a persistent productivity lag. 
The route to unlocking the value of human 
potential in tandem with profitability is to employ 
a ‘good jobs strategy', halting the erosion of 
wages, making work meaningful and purposeful, 
expanding employees’ sense of growth and 
achievement, promoting and developing talent 
on the basis of merit and proactively designing 
against racial, gender or other biases.
49 


The Future of Jobs
46
Fundamental to this strategy are two inter-
connected, ambitious priorities which, between 
them, have the power to pave the way to a better, 
more productive and more rewarding future of 
work: 1) increasing company oversight of strategic 
people metrics; 2) effective job transitions from 
declining to emerging roles through well-funded 
reskilling and upskilling mechanisms.
There is an emerging consensus among 
companies that long-term value is most 
effectively created by serving the interests of all 
stakeholders. Companies that hold themselves 
accountable will be both more viable and 
valuable in the long-term. To do so, companies 
need a series of new metrics which can, at the 
Board and C-suite level, make visible the impact 
companies have on key desirable outcomes to 
governance, planet, people and prosperity.
50
In collaboration with the International Business 
Council (IBC) the World Economic Forum has 
defined a set of key metrics which can track 
how businesses are creating broader, long-term 
value through an investment in human and social 
capital. People are at the heart of all organizations 
as investors, workers, customers, suppliers, 
distributors and contractors. The well-being, 
productivity and prosperity of individuals is at the 
core of all successful economies and firms. Human 
ingenuity is at the core of companies’ competitive 
advantage and no firm can prosper for long if it 
proves damaging to the social fabric around it. In 
the framework outlined within the paper 
Measuring 
Stakeholder Capitalism
, the Forum in collaboration 
with the IBC have identified a set of key measures 
that track: the representation of employees by 
age group, gender, ethnic and racial category and 
other markers of diversity; the pay equity between 
those different groups; the wage levels paid within 
the organization as a ratio to local minimum wage 
and the ratio of CEO pay to median employee 
pay; hours of training undertaken by employees; 
and average training investment by company. 
In addition to these core measures the report 
outlines basic standards of good work such as 
ensuring health and safety, as well as eliminating 
child and forced labour.
51
To complement such key oversight metrics, 
businesses can benefit from more granular 
operational metrics which quantify the human 
capital—the skills and capabilities of employees—
within an organization. Currently, business 
leaders lack the tools to adequately illustrate, 
diagnose and strategize for talent capacity. 
While businesses and economies have extensive 
systems to account for monetary assets at their 
disposals, there is a lag in establishing the value of 
human skills and capabilities. The losses incurred 
by talent attrition as well as the gains of acquiring 
individuals with exceptional skills or of developing 
talent pools through strong reskilling and upskilling 
programmes remain unrecorded and unobserved. 
Companies without the tools to account for the 
value of skills and capabilities lack oversight of 
the depreciation or appreciation of one of their 
key intangible assets—the capabilities of their 
workforce. Without that oversight, setting the right 
investment strategy for reskilling and upskilling 
becomes a challenging feat. A recent World 
Economic Forum report, authored in collaboration 
with Willis Towers Watson, 
Human Capital as 
an Asset: An accounting framework for the 
new world of work
, identifies additional areas of 
measurement that can start to quantify the value 
of human capital within an organization.
52 
In the 
outlined framework are the labour market value of 
the aggregate talent in an organization, the value 
added through additional reskilling and upskilling 
into job-relevant skills and the depreciation of 
those assets through gradual skills redundancy 
and a decrease in workforce engagement. The 
approaches to undertaking this quantification are 
in their infancy and there is need for further efforts 
to expand such efforts. 
Frameworks to track the value of human capital 
in company balance sheets, to determine a re-
investment strategy for human capital through 
redeployment, reskilling and upskilling, as well 
as to account for return on investment remain 
nascent. It is therefore not surprising that few 
Future of Jobs Survey respondents expected a 
return on investment from reskilling and upskilling 
workers within the first three months after 
employees complete reskilling, and that 17% of 
businesses remain unsure about the return on 
investment from reskilling. Survey responses also 
indicate that companies continue to struggle 
to quantify the scale of reskilling and upskilling 
investment that their companies currently make.
The Future of Jobs Survey signals that companies 
hope to internally redeploy 50% of workers 
displaced by technological automation and 
augmentation, but cross-cutting solutions and 
efficiencies for funding job transitions remain 
under-explored. Amidst the accelerated arrival 
of the automation and augmentation of work, 
as well as the job destruction brought about 
by COVID-19, businesses require a fast, agile 
and coherent workforce investment strategy. In 
collaboration with the leaders engaged with the 
New Economy and Society work at the World 
Economic Forum we have been able to identify 
a set of key elements of a successful workforce 
investment strategy. They include identifying 
workers who are being displaced from their roles; 
establishing appropriate internal committees to 
manage the displacement; funding reskilling and 
upskilling either wholly out of company budgets 
or by tapping into government funding; motivating 
employee engagement in this process; and 
tracking the long-term success of such transitions. 


The Future of Jobs
47
Investment into employee reskilling and upskilling
F I G U R E 3 7
Source
Future of Jobs Survey 2020, World Economic Forum.
Company leaders can ensure the success of 
workforce strategies by directing the transition of 
employees with empathy, within the rule of law, in 
line with company values and culture, by ensuring 
outcomes are equitable, and by directing learning 
to effective resources and meaningful curricula. 
A range of motivating factors can fuel reskilling 
and upskilling uptake—connected broadly to 
employees’ sense of purpose, meaning, growth 
and achievement. Employers can signal the 
market value of new online-first credentials by 
opening up role opportunities to new cohorts of 
workers who have completed mid-career reskilling 
and upskilling. Employers can make broader 
use of hiring on the basis of potential rather than 
current skill sets and match potential-based hiring 
with relevant training. The data featured in this 
report has shown that a number of emerging 
roles are already staffed by individuals who first 
transition into those positions and then ‘grow 
into’ the full skill set required. As an overarching 
principle, business leaders need to place equity 
and diversity at the heart of their talent ecosystem, 
ensuring that employees believe in their capacity 
to prosper based on merit.
Expanding effective workforce strategies requires 
strong capabilities in real time, as well as 
dynamic mapping of the types of opportunities 
that remain available to workers displaced by 
the COVID-19 pandemic and the fast pace of 
automation. A set of technology companies 
which are broadly classed as EdTech and 
reskilling services companies can support the 
Within 1 
month
2.3%
Within 1–3 
months
10.8%
Within 3–6 months
24%
Within 6–12 months
28.7%
More than 1 year
17.6%
Difficult to assess
16.6%
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Centralized budget
Budget per department
Use free learning to minimize cost
Budget per worker
Tap into government funding
Share costs with other companies in your industry
Share costs with other companies outside your industry

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